7 i THE FKE: OMAHA. KK1DAV, MARCH 1. i McKcl Vie Favors I Marketing Plan of ! Farmers of U. SJ Nebraska Governor Kmlorscs Scheme for Handling Grain As Worked Out by Farm- ' ers' Committee of 17. By FRANK RIDGEWAY. , tliliujfu Trlbune-Uiualiu lire leaned Wire. Cliicago, March .i Two gov ernors and 50 agricultural editors net at the Congress hotel yesterday (i hear a detailed explanation of the Dew marketing plans recently dratt ed by the Partners' Grain Market ing committee of 17. The editors, representing the territory from the great nortliwcst to rew iurK am. South to Texas, came on invitation ft the committee. - lievcrnor S. K. McKelvic of Ne braska said he liked the commit tee's plan because it was unpreju diced, without the element of rad icalism, and presented a cure for re action, lie approves ot the plan be cause the men who formulated it recognized the right of property, ' and they plan to use the existing "marketing machinery, i Concerns All People. The governor thinks the problem jdi marketing gram vnaiiy concerns all the people and interest in it should not be limited to the farmer. It means just as much to the people in Chicago as tt does to the farmer, iUovernor McKelvic said, j Governor J. A. O. Preus of Min nesota asked the committee whether . the grain exchanges were to be made public markets and if the farmers in tended to use the existing grain ex changes br establish new oric$. The committee replied that all the grain v men ask is that-farmers' co-operative organizations be granted full ;. fights on the grain exchanges of this : (country. Clifford Thorne, the committee's fcttorney, announced that as soon as the contracts and the execution and by-laws have been completed they Will be submitk-U to the committee of attorneys to ser if they will stand ; the test. Plan to Be Explained. TJuring the next few weeks at (meetings in all the grain producing states, farmers will be given a de railed explanation of the nejv mar-" -Meting plan by oneof the committee 'jof 17. . ' The two governors accompanied the Hamilton club delegation to the inaugural ceremonies at Washtng i ton. , The part'.', led by President Ivobert Y. Dunn, left this afternoon .'nd will reach Washington at 5 : 'clock tomorrow afternoon, t Fred YV. Upham, treasurer of the ' iiational republican committee, left Yesterday with Mrs. Upham. Sevcr j al national- comtiijtteenien .were in . I .the party. J; Messages came today from the resident-elect and the vice presi ' , rent-elect, inviting the Hamilton ,i !elegatious to meet with f!.'in, fol ; lowing the inaugural ceremonies. International President of ' Kotarians Entertained Here Armed with little pneumatic rubber gloves covering their spurs, ' six game cocks staged three tights Wednesday night for the entertain- inent of the joint banquet of the Omaha and Council Bluffs Kotary , ; clubs in the Chamber of Commerce, ? 'held in honor of Estes Suedecor, 'Portland, Ore., president of the In ternational Association of Rotary clubs. ' V Thomas Kimball eulogized the J lighting cocks in a short, speech. '. A. B. Currie, president of the Omaha I -Rotary club, presided and introduced William Coppock of the Bluffs, ;jgovcrnor of the 16th Rotary district, 'jvho in turn presented "President jPete" as Mr. Suedecor is affection ately known. Mr. Suedecor is en route home from a meeting1 of Ro r Mary directors in Chicago. He .Stalked on Rotaiy's message, as the ' Kotarians gathered around him in a circle, .sitting, standing' and iperehed on chairs. 'j State Reformatory Not ' Desired by Fairbury i Fairbury, eb., March 3. (Spe Jcial.) Dr. Welsh addressed the ! Fairbury Chamber of Commerce on j"City Sanitation." A communcation was read from Representative Ax ;tell advising the membership that Jthere would probably re a "substan i'tial appropriation for the c.onstruc tion of a state loormntorv for j young men and that it. might be located in Tairbury. It was de Jcided that the institution would be jof little advantage to Fairbury and Small pox Situation in , Pawnee City Is Improed j ? l'aw.uec City, Neb., March 3. j .lopcciai.; int- MiiiiupuA situaiiou ihere is" greatly improved. The pres ent cases are practically all in the rural districts. Only two cases are , reported in the town and these tare isolated and quarantined. iPawTiee City Caiicus toy H Name City Candidates :i Pawnee- City, Neb., March 3. , i( Special.) A mass meeting has been : called for March 11 Jo select nomi inees for the following offices, to be filled at the regular election-April "5; mayor, city clerk, city treasurer, city engineer and two couucilmen. 1 You. con make candy at home coual to the finest confectioners' if you ixsg EAGLE BRAND Condensed MUk New Air Mail Flyer On Omaha Division A new pilot has been added to the Omaha-Chicago division of the air mail service. He is, Howard C. Brown. His home is iu Charleston, W. Va. Brown tomes to Omaha from the Chicago-St. Louis division, where he has been flying with the mail since August. He succeeds J. P. Chris tenseu of Blair, Neb., who has been transferred from Omaha to the Cleveland-New York division. Chris lensen had been on the Omaha di vision since last summer. Compensation Awards Ma'de in Omaha Cases . Lincoln, March ' 3. (Special.) Compensation Commissioner Frjjnk A Kennedy today entered the follow ing orders in compensation cases: Thomas Goruf, Armour & Co. em ploye, six-weeks' compensation. $15 a week, hospital and medical bills. ' Alfred Canigiia, plumber, employed by J4hn S. Hamilton, injured right foot.- Given 40 per cent adjustment for loss of foot. Compensation 50 weeks at $12 a week, hospital and medical bills, plus what had alrea'dy been received. Had been paid $12 a week for 59 weeks. ' A. L. McCandless, employed by Sample Hart Motor company, awarded $15 a week for seven weeks and medical, and hospital bills. Frank Ulaski, employe of Morri & Co., ran nail iu finger of right hand. $7.50 a week for period of 10 weeks, hosnita' and attendance. Bine Springs Plans Ready For New Community' House Blue Springs, March 3. -(Special.) Ten volunteers have subscribed $500 with petitions requesting im mediate action on the building of the community house. The city coun cil will determine whether the proj ect shall be a municipal affair, or to join forces with farmers ..and stockmen in this vicinity. Committees have plans and speci fications which include the arrange ment for an elaborate rest room for women and a room set part for a state circulating library. A hydrant, connected with pure spring vater, will be an attraction on the Cornhusker highway. The building is to be 50 by 100 feet, and the estimated cost is $3,000. It is to be of stucco bungalow design. ' Pawnee City Will Vote Tin $10,000 Community Hall Pawnee City, Neb., March 5. -(Special.) A petition, signed by 50 to the city council calling for au elec tion to vote on whether or TiQt Paw nee City will have a new community Kail'. The volunteer fire department and the American Legion circulated the petition. The proposed building, will cost not over $40,000. The election will be held on April o. ThereTis a strong: sentiment for the model "The Hazel House." an old hotel building, as the location is ex ceptionally good and much good ma terial can be salvaged. ,' Table Roek Woman jNauied Aide to W. R. C. President Table Rock. Xeb.. March 3. (Spe cial.) Mrs. -Jlattte Griffin of Tabic Rock has receH-ed word from Mrs. Inez Jameson Bender, national presi dent of the V. R. C. that she has been appointed national aide in the organization. This honor came to Mrs. Griffin entirely unexpected and unsought. ..i-lie has been ac lirrlv connect e! with W.-'-R. C. at ! Table Rock for r.ianv vears. Pathe Phonograph to Be Given Away Free During Pathe Week Demonstration Begins Next Saturday, Easy-to-Pay Terms Will Be Made. Hundreds of music lovers in Omaha have chosen the Pathe Phonograph because of its fa mous Sapphire Ball that makes it unnecessary to change needles. This feature, and many others, will be featured Saturday at the Uni6n Out fitting Co. During the demonstration , you will have the opportunity to save $40 on a complete out fit, and in addition, secure terms of a dollar or so weekly. , Advertisement. t w Hfw 1 1111 '" 'i"innn V KeepYourSkin-Pores Active and Healthy With Cuticdra Soap , Oin fmn t. ,TiI cem. . ywherff Tnr wir p tes ariiirev:CatlCTirtkIrfkbort9rit,Ipt.X,HlduIaii. Man Who Planned Hike to Inaugural I w I Quits in Cliicago i , jLoup County Rancher Gets j Less Than Half Way I Writes He Is Penniless : and Hungry. Stranded penniless, hungry iiom I havine eone without food for 12 j hours, and wearied, YV. K. St. John, 71, Loup county rancher, who started : out from Omaha at 8 tn the morn ! irr-w of February 16. for the long 1 hike afoot to Washington for the i Harding inaugural, abandoned his trip at Chicago J uesciay auernoon. L a, 4.jn ; .i, 3(twnnnn r,f the first day of March, he sat down ; and wrote to Omaha friends No Word or Money. i "Here I am in Chicago. No word, no - money, no riothin. "1 suppose the gig Is "up, as 1 havpn't eaten for 12 hours. Fine backin' I've got. I'm ashamed of mvself. , "Guess I'll give up to the police and .have a home in a nice, clean Cook county jail. "Christmas is over. March is here, and I'm in an awful fix. "Oh, why left I the ranch? ' "People never heard of old Ezra Meeker, the old Oregon Trailer, here. I'm too far north. Took Wrong Trail. "I should have gone the old way my old friend told me, south to St. Joe, St. Louis and up the Ohio river, nearer the way he traveled. "I found one of the Lord's an nointed in the small town of Na chusa. 111. "f u-ns awpnrv and he took me in! i i was hungry and he gave me meat; 1 was weary and he let me rest in his study, penniless and he gave me of his collections, and bid me from his front porch, 'God speed.' which I certainly realized 'twixt 8 a. m. Which of these people will go to the electric chair ? ' ' WILL it be Jennie Follett, the artist's model? Will it be Teddy Follett, her young brother, or Hubert Wray, the sculptor for whom Jennie poses? Will it be proud Mrs, Collingham, the banker's wife or Bob Collingham, her son, in love with Jennie? You'll have to read "The.Empty Sack," Basil King's new novel beginning in March Cosmopolitan to find out which of these normal, average Americans commits a murder that eventually leads to the Room .with the Little Green Door. Where a little love buys a square meal The Cafe Germania in Vienna, the City of Death lively groups of boisterous men and starving women outside, wretched figures hurrying . through dark streets in a cold drizzle of rain. "That's what they've come for," Lieutenant Bramber said to Sir Philip Gibbs as they sipped their Niersteiner; "That's why they're . flirting with foreign officers. A little love in, return for a square meal!" Then, there was one girl who was"dif ferent." She was "The Madonna of the Hungry Child." Read Sir Philip Gibbs' dramatic narrative in March " Cosmopolitan. You can buy it today. Read these things in March Cosmopolitan, but remember that it isn't any one of them that makes this America's Greatest Magazine it's all of them two distinguished novels, six uncommon features and five unusual stories are in this one big number. finopolitM ERIC NELSON, Distributor Mid l':o0 m., when I arrived in Chi cago some 95 miles away. "If the Lincoln Highway were peopled with more such ministering angels, life w ould be a happy dream 1 Hut back to earth lest we for- Ke." No Mention of Plansr St. John made no nf-ntiou of his future plans on returning to his home in Loup county. When he left Omaha, he planned to reach Washington by today, to view the inauguration of President-elect Harding lie bore a little leather case in which he carried postcards of him self to sell en route for "grub money." St. John is a noted walker, having hiked to Omaha from his ranch 2JK) miles away several times while homesteading. Pawnee City Minister- Will Practice Osteopathy , ,; 1'awncc City, Neb., March 3. (Special.) Rev. A. i McCracken, j pastor of the 1-irst Christian cnurcn here, will preach his farewell ser mons Sunday. At the morning services he will talk to his, congre gation alone, and in the evening, a . ' ' lids ifccu yaanji vi mc tnuuu year?. i Mr. McCrackcn is also an osteopath and will go with his wife to Kansas City, where he will prac tice this profession. Beatrice Man Fined for Celebrating Return to City Beatrice, Nob.. March 3. --Special.) James Catpcntcr. who recent ly rticnr,ru-arpf1 fi-run ttip ritv while his 'daughter, Cordia, appeared as plain- titt in the case against rratiK Cun ningham, charged with a statutory offense, which was tried in the dis trict court and resulted in an ac quittal, celebrated his return to the city. He was arrested for drunken ness and told police he purchased the liquor in )est Beatrice. A search warrant was issued, but rothing was found. He pleaded 'guilty to the charge of intoxication and was fined $50. 'Nearly everybody worth while reads Cosmopolitan Slip-Shod Methods of . Hospitals Scored at 1 Big Surgeons' Meeting Minimum Standard Explained and Urged by Judge H.-'M. Stephens at First Annual Meeting Of Nebraska Section of American College of Surgeons. Hit or miss methods in the con duct of hospitals, in surgery, and in the practice of medicine were scored yesterday by speakers at the open ing meeting of the first clinical and scientific session of the Nebraska members of the American College of Surgeons ;rt the Fontenelle hotel. More than 100 doctors registered, and 800 are expected to attend. Judge Harold M. Stephens, direc tor of hospital activities of the Amer ican College of Surgeons, outlined the program of the college and the meaning of the minimum standard. "The days when hospitals held their, doors open indiscriminately to all who might wish to practice there, regardless of qualifications, have passed. Hospitals have learned tiie value of an organized staff; the value of trained minds and exchange of ideas in staff consultations and, above all, more careful diagnosis of cafses coming to them. More Humanitarian. "The American college, through its minimum standard is succeeding in placing most hospitals on a more humanitarian and efficient - working basis. Physicians and surgeons who do not meet with the requirements are eliminated. In the past three years a majority of the 697 hos pitals surveyed by the college rep resentatives have come up to the standard," the speaker said. Dr. James L. Smith; Chicago, of the hospital survey department of the American College of Surgeons described his experiences while he was making ' surveys of hospitals' collecting data to be submitted to the college. "In many hojq'.la'is 1 found poor ' How many ribs has a man? Has a man one less rib than a woman? Have you ever really seen a ftiad dog? Does a person actually come up three times be fore drowning ? Dc you believe in' mind-reading, ciairvoyancy, spirit ualism, or palmistry 1 Are you cre dulous or superstitious ? No matter what your pet fallacy may be, let Fred C. Kelly tell you what he thinks about the thousand and one things people believe in with out ever knowing whether they are true or false. Read "Do We Like to Be Fooled" in the March issue of Cosmopolitan. Get your copy toddy equipment; operations and cases un recorded; careless diagnosis and un organized hospital staffs. "By instituting the minimum standard, hospitals formerly oper ated unsystematized, are on a more efficient plane. Tiey have installed modern equipment, keep careful his tories ot every case and examina tion." The speaker pleaded for more effi cient methods in hospitals, not only os a scientific necessity, but as a hu manitarian nectf. Other short addresses were made by Dr. Irving S. Cutter, dean of the University of Nebraska College of Medicine; Dr. II. Von V. Schutze. dean of the Creightou College of Medicine, and Dr. R. Mitchell, Lincoln. Neb. A general discussion was opened by Dr. Delmar L. Davis, Omaha. Rev. C. B. Moulinier, Milwaukee, president of the Catholic Hospital as socaition, who was scheduled to speak, was unable to be present. While the morning session was being held at the Fontenelle, clinics were being conducted in almost every hospital in Omaha under the direction of eminent specialists. Exceptional interest is manifest cn the subject of cancer and chronic diseases. At the public meeting held last nisht in the Auditorium. Dr. Francis Carter Wood of New York City, a specialist on cancerous dis eases, lectured. Women's Meeting. Other distinguished attendants at the session are Judge Harold M . Stephens, Chicago: Dr. Burton T. Simpson. Buffalo. N. Y.; Dr. Wil liam C. MacCarty, Rochester, Minn.; 1618 Capitol Ave. Dr. Ciooro ticllhoni, St. Louis, Mo.: Or. James T, C:ise, Patile C'ri-.-k, Mich., and C. 15. Moulinier, S. J. ;uid president of the Catholic Hospital association. JK. women's puhlic meeting for dis cussions of cancer will be held at 4 o'clock this afternoon in the V. W. t A. auditorium. Dr. Burton T. Simpson of Buffalo and Dr. Palmer Findley, Omaha, will speak. The session will end this afternoon. Com majr be king, but Post Toasties (SUPERIOR CORN FLAKES) ' is president, and every day Fdavj--SalUrdalj--We, place 2880 Pairs Women's High Grade Hose on sa Every i:iv in litis sale origiuallv priced ".$1.50 to $3 and includes i Ulack silk lace liose. Pure silk to tlic knee lisle garter tcj'S.v Full fashioned silk hose. Full fashioned lisle hose. Colors Black, white, brown, navy. New shades of grey. WIS izes Including OuVsizes Every pair of hose in thi event is a wonder ful bargain, and owing to values offered, only 6 pairs allowed to each customer. Be sure you secure your six pairs Hosiery-Shop- The Store of Specialty Shops. Honest Advice on How to Keep Well Dr. W. A. Evans, who contrib utes a daily column of health notes to The Bee, Us a widely recognized authority. He stands high in his profession. His ad vice and suggestions are in ac cord with common sense ideas, which form the basis of treat ments prescribed by a large per centage of the medical profes sion. He is not a. faddist, nor does he offer cure-alls. His sugges tions are scientific, sound and based on experience. He uses plain, straightforward language, unburnished by high-sounding medical terms the average reader cannot understand. Many Bee readers have found his advice valuable. His "How to Keep Well" col umn appears daily on the edi torial page of Ihe Bee. . Dr. Evans will answer, either personally or through his news paper column, questions from Bee readers on lyygiene, sanita ti and prevention of disease. Address the letters in care of The Omaha Bee Wholesale Ualvery Is Planned for Alliance Alliance, N.h., March (Sm cial.) C. S. Moouey sold the Al liance hakey to Gillespie brothers of Osawalomie. Kan., who will take possession March 10. New equip ment will he installed and the new firm will en gag; in botji retail and wholesale business. is inauguration day at our house says Ic at v -Main Floor. 0 ! " r' l V i v Ml If